Thursday, January 25, 2018

The evident established inequalities of a deficient system of government is consistent in the seeming manifest destiny of the downtroddened. Will efficacy, rule the day.Should anyone think, the current City School Board leadership is going to look out for the well being of people, whom they-(the Neville Group) were attempting to pull away from with a Charter School, is in an altered state of reality.The Louisiana Western District Court is in the midst of a Unitary Status declaration of a fifty plus years desegregation Lawsuit in Northeast Louisiana's hub city. Imagine that, 50-plus years. All the while, the local media is concerned about other irreconcilable differing opinions. The pending declartion is evidence of the racial divide in the town of 50,000 more or less; depending on which agency the numbers come from. Now, that the new City School Board President has been voted on and selected, with the voting down racial lines, in the top two offices; it should be evident to all concerns the status of this southern town's divisions. Not very long ago, the Neville Group was seeking a Charter for the High School of the same name, at which time the now Superintendent was the Principal. The newly-elected 2018 President was instrumental in the dismantling of prior Board leadership; to the point of the then Vice-President resigning. And now, the outgoing President has decided not to run for boardmember in his district, after four terms.Accepting the current status-quo. These prevailing winds of conservative republicanism is evidenced in local actions as well, caused by the Trump Administration's racial & social animus against anything not emanating from the Caucausus Mountain Region.

LDF files lawsuit alleging discrimination against Haitian immigrants

Dear Unfound,

Yesterday, we challenged discrimination against immigrants of color.

LDF just filed a lawsuit on behalf of the NAACP and its Haitian members in response to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) decision to rescind the Temporary Protective Status (TPS) designation for Haitian immigrants.

Our lawsuit claims that the DHS, former Acting DHS Secretary Elaine C. Duke, and current DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen took irrational and discriminatory government action, denying Haitian immigrants their right to due process and equal protection under the Fifth Amendment.

As evidence of the intent to discriminate, the lawsuit cites public reporting that DHS sought crime data on Haitians with TPS, as well as information on how many Haitian nationals were receiving public benefits. The complaint further alleges that President Trump's public hostility toward immigrants of color was a contributing factor in the decision to rescind Haitian TPS.

Haitian immigrants first received Temporary Protective Status in 2010 as part of the Department of Homeland Security's efforts to assist the country after it was struck by a 7.0-magnitude earthquake. Haiti's TPS designations have been extended multiple times due to many factors, including multiple hurricanes and a cholera outbreak.

This is a simple case. Our democracy rests on the bedrock principle that every person is equal before the law. Governmental decisions that target people based on racial discrimination violate our Constitution.

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

The President of the United States of America is the Chief Executive in charge of governing the American Democratic Republic. Some have used the term Oligarch in reference to "America's", Head of State.

However, it should be noted, the President is practicing subterfuge.

Running the Country like a madman would. Keeping things in disarray and off-balance at all times. Meeting with Mitch McConnell, and redirecting the Press, who were assembled in the White House Press Room, at the last minute. All is well, in the optional dysfunction of current affairs as orchestrated by the forty-fifth president of the country! As all of this is going on, another instance is playing out in the Courts. And of all courts, in the Eastern District of Virginia, where the U.S. Attorney is Dana Boente.Former Congressman William Jefferson's "attorneys argued that these were not "official acts" of a congressman. And after the Supreme Court, in a case involving former Virginia Gov. Robert McDonnell, cast doubt on official corruption cases in 2016, Jefferson's attorneys pressed that argument again, winning over Ellis."

On today, Judge T. S. Ellis, III approved the extension of time for the Government to decide if it want to retry Former Congressman William J. Jefferson, on considerably fewer charges, perhaps for which; the time already incarcerated will suffice for "felony crimes he was tried on and convicted of." William J. Jefferson, the former New Orleans Congressman was freed from the Oakdale, Louisiana Federal Prison Camp October 5th 2017, all the while the government was in its now usual death spiraling morass.
The thing was so profound, that documents Ex-New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin filed "has asked a federal judge to throw out his corruption conviction, citing a recent Supreme Court decision making it more difficult to convict public officials of bribery. Nagin, 60, argues that his case is identical to corruption cases recently overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court concerning former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell and by a federal appeals court concerning former New York State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver. The Supreme Court ruling spurred the immediate release of former Louisiana Congressman William Jefferson, who had been serving a 13-year sentence since 2012. He faces a new sentencing hearing on Dec. 1 on three of the seven counts remaining against him. Before then, though, the government must decide by Monday (Oct. 16) if it wants to retry Jefferson on the seven counts that were tossed out. " [As of today October 16, 2017 the Court has given the government until December 4th to decide, if it will retry Jefferson]"He was tried on 16 counts of corruption in 2009 and convicted of 11, but Ellis, whom President Ronald Reagan appointed to the court, overturned one of them earlier."Ronald Reagan.

America is at war with herself, again. And we are losing miserably. No one wins. A new date for the government to decide if it will retry the former congressman has caused for thought on whether a retrial on the remaining counts is even feasible.However, this changes and further defines the "Honest Services" charge applied to government officials. The President's Executive Office, at the least has and still is "functioning as a 'criminal enterprise'; with close family as aides, advisors and other prestigious positions in the White House. Merely, with the Trump D.C. Hotel, the former Washington Post Office; profiting as he is the sitting President, with foreign government officials even residing there, when in the Capitol for presidential related business; is the definition of the Law, because of personal financial benefit to the elected president. The receiving of financial gain, from a transaction as a result of the "political office" held by the beneficiary is the bottom line. It has already been proven, that Jared Kushner's Sister, was in the Orient, setting the table to make money off of the presidential connections.

Tuesday, August 8, 2017

I have consistently followed the steady, drip of the process to disenfranchise Black Folk in 2017 Society. The latest debacle concerns Excellence Academy. As I passed down Forsythe Avenue yesterday. The marquee read about the Neville Alumni and Friends Association of which the School Board Superintendent is an adherent of. The bottom line goal of the "Northside Neville-ites" is to seize control of the present and return it to the "days of yore"! There is the golf course, the seasoned community of generations taught the same ideals and the indoctrination of those coming from the outer limits of the area. In the effort to "back-down" and further demoralize the black community, the underbelly of the real Monroe is re-emerging. From local media, highlighting deathification in the community, but failing to recognize the effects of "media-masturbation" on any subject in the negative of black-folks concerns. Under any circumstance, Excellence Academy was a "beacon of hope" for the black community. For whatever reasons, Brent Vidrine, the School Board and its unwillingness to fight for the continuance of a "positive venue" in the "Greater-Monroe, West Monroe, Ouachita tradition" has back tracked to lesser gods. This is a horrid defeat in the ears of A. G. Facen, P. Rayfield Brown, Morris Henry Carroll, Alex Burns, H. H. George, Jimmy Andrews, George Muse Jr., and John I. Reddix. And, so Negro Citizens of Ouachita Parish have been challenged in their desire for self-determination. It is akin to the abridgements of the fifties. A government jurisdiction, called the Monroe City School Board, led by a former principal of Neville High School; which in the recent past, 2013-14; sought charter school status and was denied, has in the midst of a federal desegregation court moderation; denied funding and did not do all the diligence to bring the Excellence Academy into "school system policy compliances", monetarily. Economicly?A school, that the Governor recognized in a recent (2017) visit at the Mt. Zion Community Center in the heart of Monroe. The underbelly, the evilness of 1965 desegregation in Ouachita Parish. The all of it, is absolute, in the present necessitated appeal process headed to the 2nd Circuit of Louisiana.*This Story Will be Updated

Thursday, December 22, 2016

This ordinance, allows for the "government" to enter owned property and owner/occupant may be forced into court for not allowing an officer of code enforcement to enter his/her property.

After notice has been given, "Any inspection conducted pursuant to an order permitting right of entry"; is done still in violation of a person's right to privacy, and unreasonable searches.

The fee schedule passed at Tuesday's city council meeting specifies the
fines for high grass and weeds, inoperable vehicles, littering and
derelict/unsecure structures. Each fine class was reduced by $50 before
final passage. All fines not specified in the fee schedule will be set
at $50 for a first violation, $200 for a second and $450 for subsequent
violations. News Star Article

It is not, for certain if there is any fees reduction, for seniors; and certainly nothing is in place for the disabled, veterans or otherwise.

Injunctive relief is necessary for further review.

At the least an elected official, should request an Attorney General's Opinion on the validity of this ordinance. However, it would appear, that every political office holder is in lock step, with this egregious attack against basic civil liberties of a specific group in this society. The Poor.

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Just recently, a mishap led to dire consequences.

Over Fifty (50) years of endeavor, nearly lost, affecting thousands.

I can only imagine, the depths of the agonizing disbelief of the efforts ancestors of our deliverance from captivity in Ouachita Parish, West Monroe, Louisiana and the twin city Monroe, must be reeling from in their resting places.

Things really began to melt, with the debacling circumstances of the South Monroe economic development apparatus devolving in to chaos; at the same time a Bail-bonding business was the scene of a double murder.

How, could it thusly be so rude of an awakening to the public, under the gaze of "hard-fought desegregation" memorial pillar of the Wildcats Stadium.

Economic Development, Murder and School Desegregation. The most recently debacle of the Ouachita Multipurpose Community Action Program and the thread like hanging on of its continuing through September 30th, of a hallmark "head start" program. 2016 is an unforgettable year.

OMCAP Head Start program to end A watershed, Landmark program. Coupled with the recent up-stir at the Monroe City School Board; this latest incident should be proof, that we need to fight for "hard-fought" gains. When, School Board Officer Brenda Shelling, stood & disrupted the Board meeting, calling a white-male board member out, as an instigator, subjugater and "inside facilitator" for the destruction of the predominantly black, City School System.

The good doing white-folks' negroes, said Shelling needed to stop being a disrupter. From OMCAPS Head Start, to Neville High School's repair, the bastion for the "white seperatist, under the guise of desiring to participate in the federal court's mandates the white board members thoroughly disguised themselves, as seekers of justice.

And the gullible, "can we all just get along crowd" crowed in this garden of gethsemane, against the Truth. OMCAP's demise is the proof. I would imagine the members of the court-ordered bi-racial committee of the early 70's, by federal injunction; are saying, "i'll fight you till hell freeze over" as A.G. Facen said, back then. But, this tired generational residue from back then, don't believe in " agitate, agitate" no more.

I can remember, my father's comments about the Rev. P. Rayfield Brown and the constant efforts in the formation of the "CAP" program. It dealt with Poverty and the affects of it; in education, health and housing. Folks had issues. Integration and desegregation were the watch words. Everyone in position were required to maintain the cause in their position(s).

In a lot of ways the ball has been dropped. And, when someone grabs the ball; those in position now, act like they don't know what is going on.

The Federal Courts in 2016 still dealing with desegregation?

I recall not to many months ago, the superintendent, pushing "the Neville pull-out plan with BESE. But, we want to act as if we are not aware, that the same folk are trying to desolve the Monroe City School System.

Shelling turned and shouted at board member Bill Willson, saying he was smirking.

"That's what you've done, you racist pig," she yelled at him, pointing to emphasize her words.

In a June 2015, "extemporaneous" ; community meeting concerning Neville High School repairs, "Board member Bill Wilson asked the crowd if they would like to see
Neville become a charter school and no one raised their hand. When asked
if they believe Neville should stay with the School Board, almost every
person in the crowd raised their hands". North Monroe Skullduggery !!

"When we are trying to recruit a company, or recruit people to the
community what they will do is look at the surrounding cities and
villages and go there. This is really detrimental to our ability to
recruit people", President & CEO Monroe Chamber of Commerce Sue
Nicholson said.
Board member Jennifer Hanline said after the
meeting; that it isn't a time to pick sides and board members should
want to see the community get better.

She thinks Shelling's actions were unacceptable and that sort of
behavior gets in the way of progress especially with a board working to
help the school system.
"I want to say I'm so sorry we are suppose to
represent our community and we're suppose to represent the people who
elected us, and the children that are coming to our school", Board
Member Jennifer Haneline said. Community-Members--Leaders-react-to-the-Monroe-City-School-Board-Meeting ..

What we need to understand is the suit, Jimmie Andrews et al was filed by black folk disenfranchised by segregation. And so, in the midst of a federal hearing of the status of Monroe City School Systems, everyone goes off their rockers, like they don't know; that the white-folks crying foul, cause they ain't invited "to the D.C. federal DoJ meeting".. .

In the memorandum, Willson, Dayton and Haneline attest that board President Rodney McFarland and Vice President Brenda Shelling have frustrated their efforts to participate in implementing the consent decree by:According to the memorandum, these statements "establish nonfeasance and bad faith on the part of the MCSB and, potentially, collusion between certain MCSB members and the United States with respect to the appointment of a court monitor. ..."The United States was either complicit in the actions of the MSCB or, through nonfeasance of duty, ignorant of MSCB’s backroom tactics to select EPG as the Independent Court Monitor."Discouraging them from attending a September hearing on consideration of unitary status. Failing in to adequately inform all board members of the ruling on unitary status.Refusing to include all board members in the negotiation process for the consent decree adopted in December.Refusing to include all board members in the process to select the independent court monitor required by the consent decree.Soliciting the votes of board members Daryll Berry and Brandon Johnson to adopt the Educational Planning Group without prior discussion of the group with all members. Monroe City Schools The illusion, that the very same set of folks who are the descendants of those, who perpetrated separate but equal; should be involved in conversations with DOJ is the epitome of white privilege. Neville Group sought to intervene. To none effect. It is noted here because, folks is forgetting the doggone avarice amongst these illegitimate usurpers.

At a midday school board meeting Wednesday, Doug Lawrence, the board's attorney, said that fivecommunications from the court had moved within the past 24 hours. Those were:

The Tuesday order by Hayes that permitted NAFA, Jones and Hanks to intervene;an order from Hayes vacating that order filed Wednesday;notification that Hayes will no longer be involved in the case and setting all motions before James;a notice referring the motion for permission to intervene before James that was filed Wednesday;and a corrected caption on the notice filed the same day."Judge James personally is taking over the entire case, which is inclusive of the petition to intervene in the lawsuit filed by an outside group, so the prior judge that issued the prior ruling is no longer involved in the case," Lawrence said.

Court documents state anyone who opposes the request of NAFA and the two parents to intervene should file a memorandum in opposition within 21 days. After that, they "may file a reply within 14 days after the memorandum in opposition is filed."

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

President Barack Hussein Obama is being blamed for the execution of a Shia Cleric in Saudi Arabia, amid the insanity of a presidential campaign in which a megalomaniac is inciting global implosion on an altar of "pseudo-religious sacrifice" of "jihad john's" Islamic Faith.

America's fascination with a "megalomaniac" who doesn't really give a damn, about Islam; but does give a damn that Barack Hussein Obama was famously accused by the same Megalo, of being "unamerican or nonamerican" and himself [POTUS] a Muslim.

This is the same President, who was famously derided in his christian-belief under the tutelage of the Reverend Jeremiah Wright, and the Reverend's Liberation Theology. Which theology is a basic staple of "the true black church"! In affect, american "robbed the african president of america" of his religion.

Historically, a twice done "damnable heresy" ! His african-father would have been born a Muslim, converted from christianity. This constant slight of his opponents with the Islamic adherence issue; is a "colonial-masters" racist attack, returned to the vestiges of the american slave market!

A note of interest, United States of America, and its causcasian demigoguery: Black America will not forget, how your voices harangued incidiously against your own President. And how your tea party, GOP, NeoCon republican movement has gotten us all the way to Oregon. There is no turning around, now. Hell and chaos is on the american horizon.

If Mr. Obama had more-aggressively attempted to save the Iranian Cleric, the republicans would all has further said, the prexy was a true "muslim-lover". No different than the ostracisation of caucasians who were "termed" nigger-lovers.

Finally, the "gun control" executive action is a necessity.

However, it is my hope, that clear-focus, would be taken to In-Custody-Deaths. It is our position, that this is a human rights issue. The killing of Americans, in "incarceration-centers" or in-police-custody; is a violation of human decency.

In Morehouse Parish Louisiana at the court-house, was the scene of a tragically killed inmate, while being transferred by a Fourth JDC, courthouse official police, the man committed suicide by-cop.

Inmate dies in Morehouse courthouse shooting

A

Following a shooting at the Morehouse Parish Courthouse, one inmate is dead with no other injuries reported.

According
to Sheriff Mike Tubbs, the MPSO responded to a shots fired call at the
courthouse at approximately 2 p.m. on Tuesday. An inmate in the
courthouse, whose name has been released as Keith Atkins, age 43, was
confirmed dead via suicide following a scuffle outside of the courtroom.
According to Tubbs, no personnel or civilians were injured when the
incident occurred because of the location.

On
February 16, 2015 Atkins was involved in a hostage situation involving
his estranged wife. After Atkins was taken into custody — the hostage
was freed after Atkins came in contact with the MPSO — he was booked on
charges of second degree kidnapping (domestic violence), aggravated
assault on a police officer, possession of schedule II (meth) and
possession of a firearm while in control of a controlled dangerous
substance.

According to Tubbs, as MPSO personnel
was involved in the incident, the LSP was called into investigate.
Tubbs said LSP detectives were at the courthouse Tuesday afternoon and
will be releasing additional information as it becomes available.

The courthouse was closed for the remainder of Tuesday but is expected to reopen Wednesday morning.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

A little-noticed U.S. Supreme Court ruling from May could give an unexpected boost to alleged victims of excessive force by police in their efforts to hold law enforcement officers accountable.

In the aftermath of recent police shootings, including the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., lawyers have generally viewed high court precedents as obstacles that only benefit police.

ButTolan v. Cotton, abrief unsigned opinionissued on May 5, could point the other way, making it easier for alleged victims to fend off summary dismissal of their civil rights lawsuits against police.

Tolanadmonished lower court judges that when police in such cases seek to dismiss lawsuits against them, disputed facts and inferences must be viewed in a light most favorable to the citizen making the claim.

"Courts may not resolve genuine disputes of fact in favor of the party seeking summary judgment," the high court ruled, adding that "a judge's function at summary judgment is not to weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter, but to determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial."

Since the facts of episodes like those involving Brown and Eric Garner are often in dispute — even when there is video evidence — theTolandecision could give individuals claiming civil rights violations (under42 U.S.C. 1983) a better chance of getting past summary dismissal motions.Tolanhas already been invoked in more than 500 federal cases since May.

Two weeks afterTolanwas issued, the Supreme Court itself cited the ruling in remandingThomas v. Nugent, a suit brought by the family of a Louisiana man who died after a police officer repeatedly used a Taser on him.

Two weeks afterTolanwas issued, the Supreme Court itself cited the ruling in remandingThomas v. Nugent, a suit brought by the family of a Louisiana man who died after a police officer repeatedly used a Taser on him.

"Tolanresonates today in many ways. We were thrilled when the court ruled as it did," said Christina Swarns (left), litigation director of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, which filed a brief in the case. "It was a reminder to courts that they can't supplant the role of the jury, and they can't put a thumb on the scale in favor of the state."

The decision stemmed from a ­widely publicized suit brought by Robbie Tolan (left), the son of Major League Baseball ­player Bobby Tolan. On New Year's Eve in 2008, Bellaire, Texas, police officer Jeffrey Cotton shot the younger Tolan in his parents' driveway. Police were responding to a mistaken report of a stolen car. After Cotton pushed Tolan's mother up against the garage door, Robbie Tolan told him to leave his mother alone. Apparently without warning, Cotton shot Tolan three times, leaving him alive but with permanent injuries.

Lower courts dismissed Tolan's Section 1983 suit, with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuitrulingthat Cotton deserved "qualified immunity" because his actions did not violate a "clearly established right."

But the Supreme Court said that in ruling that way, the Fifth Circuit improperly viewed the facts as favoring Cotton, the officer. "The court should have acknowledged and credited Tolan's evidence," the high court said, even though it recognized that "the witnesses on both sides come to this case with their own perceptions, recollections, and even potential biases."

Because of the Supreme Court's decision, a new trial in Tolan's case has been set for September. Florida civil rights lawyer Benjamin Crump asked the trial court in Houston in September to be recognized as Tolan's new lawyer. Crump also represents Michael Brown's family in Missouri, as well as the family of Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old by shot and killed by a Cleveland police officer last month.

Cotton's lawyers opposed Crump's motion, claiming he would ignore agreements made during prior proceedings in the case. The trial court accepted Crump's representation. Crump did not respond to a request for comment.

Police who are accused of civil rights violations almost always seek summary dismissal of the claim, said Martin Siegel of the Law Offices of Martin J. Siegel in Houston, who brought theTolancase to the Supreme Court. "ButTolanreminds lower courts that the summary-judgment rules don't change just because a citizen sues an officer for excessive force."

The 11-page decision marked the first time in 10 years the court had ruled against police claiming qualified immunity from suit in a Section 1983 case.

Justice Samuel Alito Jr., joined by Justice Antonin Scalia, wrote a concurrence criticizing the court for engaging in mere "error correction." But Alito said, "I agree that there are genuine issues of material fact and that this is a case in which summary judgment should not have been granted."

"The decision surprised us," said Eric Del Pozo, a lawyer at Jenner & Block who worked on the Legal Defense Fund's brief. "The court has protected the free speech and religious rights of corporations and requires a warrant before police can scan the call log of an arrestee's cellphone or attach a GPS device to someone's car," Del Pozo said. "Yet, for whatever reason, the court has been less solicitous of claims to civil rights infractions in money damages suits. InTolan, at least, the pendulum swung back a bit in the opposite ­direction."

Saturday, September 20, 2014

The Problem with Ferguson :Whites will NEVER understand cause they really, really don't care; and "they don't really care about us"! Michael had it right, when he said that in a song!! If, the powers that be really cared, Trayvon's killer would be behind bars. I'll just stay right there, and not go to any of the five simultaneous cases occurring during "Ferguson"; not including the CHP beating of a sister on the highway. And if the world or any parts of the global society thinks for one minute that "this" at this point going to just fade into the sunset.Everyone is wanting for this to just go away and be over with; the citizens of St. Louis, Ferguson, St. Louis County, the state of Missouri and most likely national leaders on every level. However, this is the one that get's every one straightened on their extra-curricullar racial attitudes. America, just better get itself prepared for what's to come. The local justice apparatus is not about to indict the police officer who killed Brother Michael. And when that doesn't happen, all hell will break loose.

From the "Beer Summit" we collectively dropped. the ball. This issue is a must to be addressed. And, Ferguson, Missouri "must be" the place where this issue is finally clarified and put in its place. This "must be" is not as if there's a likelihood that its not going to happen. The thing will occur. There,"must be" rectification of the situation created over time, culminating in the death of Michael Brown; which evolved into an "insurrection" and which insurrection is still in process, in Missouri, in the center of the country.

This Mason-Dixon Line Southern State, with its dixiecratic ways, needs 250,000 citizens to descend upon, St. Louis' Ferguson to get this point of "non-compliance to the racist mores and attitudes" engrained in the stateside processes. Missouri's reticent ways date back to the Dred Scott processes of immorality of human "ownership". And here we now reside, in a 16th century mentality forced upon the mindsets of a 21st century people, who are determined to rebel against the debauchery of the malaise. To live in such past is pure insanity. That is why, it then becomes okay to fire stun grenades and tear gas on what is considered non-humans or three/fifths people.

While Russian Jets are turned around, by Canadian and U.S. Jets at the Alaskan demarcation; Citizens of this nation demise planning to strongly enmasse in Ferguson. As an individual vaults the White House fence, and is stopped by government agents, only as he enters the door. Even while the White House is evacuated.

Doom & Damnation awaits, if the Matter of one Michael Brown, Jr., is not handled properly.

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Malcolm Shabazz, his death in Mexico City and the international implications of the same are issues that must be addressed in a larger forum than just the United States government, obviously.

A formal announcement by any agency of the government of the USA, has not come forth. The ancillary entities have not come forth with any demands in lieu of the government's inaction. It should be obvious why this has occurred. There has already been a funeral service in Oakland, California. That service was held at an Islamic/Muslim Center.

It has been stated, El Hajj Malcolm El Shabazz, will be interred in New York state, along side his grandparents. Born Malcolm Lateef Shabazz, Young Malcolm's death on foreign soil is "an affront; for all Blacks, Negroes, African-Americans, sharecroppers decendants and the progeny of formerly enslaved Africans worldwide.Now. It is evident a problem exist in the current, retaliative society, globally. Specifically though, in America and the now"high profile", targeted killing of an American Citizen in Mexico City; a heightened alarm should be sounded.

In the state of Florida, USA, Trayvon Martin; targeted by a "neighborhood watch" patroller, is killed. It is without doubt, that Young Malcolm was targeted.

Mr. Doudou Diene, a Sengalese lawyer and United Nations Human Rights Council
special rapporteur on racism toured eight American citiesin 2008. A cross-border special rapporteur must be dispatched in reference to the killing of El HajjMalcolm El Shabazz in Mexico City. This incident began at the San Diego-Tijuana border.

It is such that, if any type of relief is to be obtained from this ongoing tragedy, it will be from international-economic pressure.

And since, the United Nations is in New York City, this is the place citizens of the world, America and the Americas should seek for appropriate pressure to be applied to both countries. Current ongoing immigration negotiations in the U.S. Congress and the restylised Benghazi uproar are both hindrances to any willing effort for a U.S. investigation, on its own. However, as life goes on a heartfelt initiative can re-ignite lost fervor which has been building for some time now. We must get a hold of ourselves. In 1961, sit-ins were staged at the U.N., guards were called and a melee ensued, sparking day long protests across Manhattan. A movement within a movement was spawned from that "days spark".

Enemy combatants are being declared of exiles from over 30 years ago. Courts are, ordering federal government sentenced tax-evaders to undergo counseling, as if to "change her mind" or "readjust her free artistic thinking".

And now, after seeing this image. Our Sisters. His daughters. Vandalized. Robbed. Again.

Some are quickly demanding an outcry from the public at large. However, the Most High, the Almighty God knows mourning is done in solace. It has been recounted, that a memorial service will occur in New York City next week. An interment, and there still must be time. For the Shabazz Family.

My heart is heavy this night as the sun has gone down here.In the name, of all that is called Holy. Peace and Deliverance.

Justice & Peace Advocacy

Alavi Foundation

Cairo, Egypt - 4 June 2009

" There must be a sustained effort to listen to each other; to learn from each other; to respect one another; and to seek common ground. As the Holy Quran tells us, "Be conscious of God and speak always the truth "
Obama quotes the Quran

Recently

Obama's Rahm - Shadow Party Vestiges

Rahm Emanuel talked with governor's office about who should fill Obama's Senate seat

Chief of staff for Obama had list of namesBy Bob SecterDecember 13, 2008Rahm Emanuel, President-elect Barack Obama's pick to be White House chief of staff, had conversations with Gov. Rod Blagojevich's administration about who would replace Obama in the U.S. Senate, the Tribune has learned.

The revelation does not suggest Obama's new gatekeeper was involved in any talk of dealmaking involving the seat. But it does help fill in the gaps surrounding a question that Obama was unable or unwilling to answer this week: Did anyone on his staff have contact with Blagojevich about his choice for the Senate seat?Blagojevich and John Harris, his former chief of staff, face federal charges in an alleged shakedown involving the vacant Senate seat, which Illinois law grants the governor sole authority to fill.Obama said Thursday he had never spoken to Blagojevich about the Senate vacancy and was "confident that no representatives" of his had engaged in any dealmaking over the seat with the governor or his team. He also pledged Thursday that in the "next few days" he would explain what contacts his staff may have had with the governor's office about the Senate vacancy.

Emanuel, who has long been close to both Blagojevich and Obama, has refused to respond to questions about any involvement he may have had with the Blagojevich camp over the Senate pick.

A spokeswoman for Emanuel also declined to comment Friday.

One source confirmed that communications between Emanuel and the Blagojevich administration were captured on court-approved wiretaps.

Another source said that contact between the Obama camp and the governor's administration regarding the Senate seat began the Saturday before the Nov. 4 election, when Emanuel made a call to the cell phone of Harris.

The conversation took place around the same time press reports surfaced about Emanuel being approached about taking the high-level White House post should Obama win.

Emanuel delivered a list of candidates who would be "acceptable" to Obama, the source said.

Sometime after the election, Emanuel called Harris back to add the name of Democratic Atty. Gen. Lisa Madigan to the approved list, the source said.Blagojevich and Harris, who resigned his state post Friday, are charged with plotting to sell the selection of Obama's replacement in exchange for lucrative jobs or campaign cash for the governor.

Among other things, a government affidavit filed with the charges claimed that Blagojevich had kicked around the idea of using his Senate selection to leverage an appointment to an ambassadorship or Cabinet post in the Obama administration.

Federal authorities have not suggested Obama or his team knew about Blagojevich's alleged schemes.

In an interview, Schakowsky said she spoke to Emanuel on Thursday and he seemed unfazed by the controversy.

Schakowsky also spoke of a conversation she had with Emanuel shortly after he was named chief of staff.

She said she called [Emanuel] him "to get some intelligence" on whether Obama might approve of her selection as senator."He indicated that the president-elect would be fine with certain people and I was one of them," Schakowsky said.

Schakowsky said it was natural for Obama to take an interest in the selection process for his Senate seat. "It makes perfect sense for the president-elect or his people to have some interaction about filling the seat he was vacating," she said.Though now working full-time on Obama's transition, Emanuel has yet to resign his congressional seat.

Illinois law has a different process for filling vacant House seats than Senate seats. When Emanuel resigns, a special election will be held for his replacement.One alleged scheme outlined in the charges against Blagojevich involves the special election for Emanuel's seat. The government affidavit said Blagojevich and others were recorded talking about an unnamed "president-elect adviser" concerned about the election for Emanuel's congressional seat who might help the governor land a new job at a non-profit organization.

A NEW DAY

Mandela was still labeled - "Terrorist" by the US government on 25 June 2008

Memphis, Tennessee

Forty Years After the Riots-Memphis Tri-State Defender

Forty Years After The Riots, City Still RecoveringBy Taaq KirkseyWI Contributing WriterThursday, April 3, 2008In late March 1968, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was in Memphis, Tenn. supporting a strike of the city’ssanitation workers over wages and working conditions.On April 4, an assassin’s bullet killed King on the second floor of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, a day aftergiving his last speech in which he famously told attendees at the Mason Temple that he “had been to themountaintop,” a reference to the multiple threats against his life at the time.Within hours of King’s death, residents of Washington’s Black enclaves in Northwest – Shaw, ColumbiaHeights and the U Street corridor – and the H Street corridor in Northeast, along with Howard Universitystudents led by Kwame Ture, then known as Stokely Carmichael and head of the Student NonviolentCoordinating Committee, would confront local businesses to pressure them to close out of respect.Confrontation would ultimately devolve into violent clashes, as residents rioted throughout NorthwestWashington, burning buildings and marching within blocks of the White House, which was protected by Armyinfantry soldiers as President Lyndon B. Johnson had called in federal troops and National Guardsmen toquell the unrest. When the smoke finally cleared, 13 people had died, thousands were injured, and theeconomy of Black Washington was severely impaired.The District was not alone in its turmoil, as similar riots occurred in cities nationwide, including Baltimore andChicago. The destruction in Washington, however, would have a profound effect on its economic future, theremnants of which can still be observed today, according to Donald G. Murray Jr., board chairman of theHumanities Council of Washington, D.C.“What you saw…was that private sector [businesses] really abandoned this city,” said Murray, referring to theflight of local businesses and much of the city’s middle class in the aftermath. Economic recovery would takeyears in many of the areas affected by the riots.Murray, fresh from military service in the Vietnam War, was a graduate student at Howard’s School of SocialWork at the time of the riots. King’s murder “sort of triggered the rage in urban cities” that, according toMurray, was not as prominently addressed as the more widely scrutinized discrimination faced by Blacks inthe American South.The growing militancy among Black activists leading up to King’s death would flower after the riots, accordingto Murray. It was “the end of the Civil Rights Movement…more towards self-determination, less integration,”he said.He said living conditions in the District – where housing prices have skyrocketed in the last decade – havebecome much worse for its lower income residents, leading to a greater disparity among the city’s haves andhave-nots. As the city has recovered from the post-riot economic downturn, he said, gentrification hasoverwhelmed those “who were here during the tough times.”Ward 5 Advisory Neighborhood Commissioner Robert “Bob” King, an activist who has worked with seniorcitizens under each of the District’s mayors, concurs, though from a national perspective.“Dr. King would be unhappy,” he said. Robert King argues that the size of the African American population inthe nation’s prisons is a testament to the neglect of Dr. King’s desire for racial and social reconciliation.Like Murray, Robert King is critical of some changes that the city has undergone, notably the shrinkage ofvocational education in its schools’ curriculums, which he called the “greatest disaster” to the District’s schoolsystem and an impediment for many of its youth. “Kids that learn how to fix their own cars won’t be stealingcars,” he said.Murray suggested, however, that the substantial support from White Americans for Sen. Barack Obama’spresidential campaign is evidence that Dr. King’s aspirations are closer to realization than in previous years.He drew a connection between Obama’s multicultural appeal and King’s worldly impact.“We argue that [Dr.] King had a global legacy” on media culture and various freedom movements since hisdeath, he said.He added that the challenge for contemporary Washington, 40 years after the death of King and one of themost contentious riots in American history, is to continue the city’s financial rehabilitation while making roomfor those who do not have the skills to thrive an increasingly service-based economy; all while preserving thetraditions of its past generations.“How do you bring the two cultures together and create a vibrant city?” he asked.On a national level, one might wonder whether Dr. King was pondering the same thing in the early eveninghours of April 4, 1968, just before an assassin’s bullet would change the lives of many in the District andAmerica at large.

Louisiana Excessive Force 2008-(foul language)

Hyde Park - England - Mandela 2008

Congress sends Bush bill to end visa restrictions on Mandela, other ANC members

WASHINGTON - Congress sent President Bush a bill on Friday that once signed into law will allow Nelson Mandela to visit the United States without the secretary of state having to certify that he is not a terrorist.Negotiators from the Senate and the House agreed Thursday night on a final version of the bill to remove from U.S. databases the names of the former South African president and anybody else marked only because of a relationship with the African National Congress.Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told lawmakers in April that she was embarrassed by the situation.The ANC has been South Africa's ruling party since the country's rebirth in 1994 as a majority-ruled democracy rather than a white-ruled state where the vote was based on race. The ANC was removed from the State Department's list of terror organizations years ago, but its members have remained on U.S. immigration watch lists. During the Cold War, the West considered the ANC a communist organization that wanted to bring down pro-Western South Africa.The Mandela situation came up as Rice testified in a legislative hearing in April."It is frankly a rather embarrassing matter that I still have to waive in my own counterpart — the foreign minister of South Africa — not to mention the great leader, Nelson Mandela," Rice said.Mandela was awarded the 1993 Nobel Peace Prize with then-South African Prime Minister F.W. de Klerk for peacefully ending the apartheid segregation system and bringing the vote to all South Africans. He easily won the nation's first election where everyone could vote in 1993 and became president.Mandela turns 90 on July 18. He spent 27 years in prison for his work with the ANC, which the apartheid government banned in 1960.The State Department alluded to the sensitivity of the ANC situation in a report last year on global terrorism.In speaking of South African help against terrorists, the report noted: "The South African government is sensitive to distinctions between `terrorist organizations' and `liberation movements,' since the ruling African National Congress was long branded a terrorist group during the struggle against apartheid."Rep. Howard Berman , D-Calif., introduced the bill to remove the stigma from Mandela and other ANC members."The Senate and House have now both affirmed that America's place is on the side of those who fought against apartheid, and there should be no discrimination in our legal code based on their ANC association alone," he said after announcing agreement on the final legislation.

In speaking of South African help against terrorists, the report noted: "The South African government is sensitive to distinctions between `terrorist organizations' and `liberation movements,' since the ruling African National Congress was long branded a terrorist group during the struggle against apartheid."Rep. Howard Berman , D-Calif., introduced the bill to remove the stigma from Mandela and other ANC members."The Senate and House have now both affirmed that America's place is on the side of those who fought against apartheid, and there should be no discrimination in our legal code based on their ANC association alone," he said after announcing agreement on the final legislation.

Images for Change

Ville Platte High School:-GONE!!

VILLE PLATTE - Ville Platte High School hit a landmark this year, its centennial.

And on Tuesday, Evangeline Parish Ward One voters will decide if the troubled school's 100th birthday will be the year the school closes or is reborn.That question has been a source of anxiety for Principal Peggy Edwards. When she watched the school's homecoming pep rally last month, a wave of sadness washed over her."As I looked at the alumni and the students, I thought, 'This could possibly be the last time we do this,'" she said. "What will it do to Ville Platte and our community?"The predominantly-black school has been the center of a desegregation struggle for almost 45 years. After a court-ordered reorganization in 2004, the school created a medical academy and became the only school in the parish to offer Advanced Placement courses. Even with those student incentives, the school has been unsuccessful in attracting white students.Voters will weigh-in on a bond on Tuesday that would repair the school that greets students with crumbling red brick and ancient window-unit air conditioners jutting from the building.The ballot initiative is the third one this year and the seventh one since 1983. The tax would fund a $17.75 million bond that would be generated from property tax over the next 30 years.Homeowners who own more than $75,000 worth of property would see their property taxes increase 15.5 mills. On a $100,000 house, homeowners would pay about $3 more a month.Groups for and against the bond have participated in an aggressive campaign, both hoping the large-turnout common in a presidential election will help their cause.Those against the tax have said the bond is too excessive, even "greedy," said Mark Shuff, chairman of the Concerned Taxpayers Alliance of Ward One. He would prefer a tax that applies to all residents, like a sales tax."It's too much for only a certain group of people to pay for it, which is the property owners, people who have worked all their lives and will have to pay for something that will help those who haven't," Shuff said.Evangeline Parish School District Superintendent Toni Hamlin disputes that the amount is excessive, and she and others in favor of the bond worry what it will mean for the school if the bond fails. The high school would close and students would be bused to different high schools."It wouldn't feel right going to a different school and have them looking at us all weird," Ville Platte High School 10th-grader Taylor Scott said. "It would be like we're going into their school and bossing them around."If the city eliminates its only public high school, residents worry what it will do for the local economy and if it will create tension in an already divided community that is split between sending their children to the 77 percent black Ville Platte High and the 99 percent white Sacred Heart Catholic High School."It's going to mess up the town," 11th-grader Jerinsky Anderson said.A troubled schoolVille Platte High School was founded in 1908 and accredited by the state the same year. When Ville Platte became part of the newly formed Evangeline Parish in 1910, the school was the parish's model for education and its only state-accredited school.The school remained a whites-only school until 1965 when then-15-year-old Grace Vidrine chose to enroll and leave black-only James Stephens High School across town. At the time, students could choose which school to attend but there was still an established black and white school in the town."I had a lot of bad experiences, but what I did find is that after every bad experience there was a good thing. If I got name-called, then I never once doubted that it was a God-appointed job for me," said Grace Vidrine Sibley, now the Interim Title I Supervisor at the Evangeline Parish School Board.In 1970, James Stephens High School was shut down, and Ville Platte High was completely integrated. At the same time, upset patrons founded Evangeline Academy in Vidrine, and enrolled nearly 2,000 white students in the private school. It closed down five years later because of lack of funding. The state refused to fund what it thought to be a white-flight school.Scores sufferDemographic data on Ville Platte High dating back to the 1960s was not immediately available from the state Department of Education.But an analysis of data spanning a decade shows that the school not only struggles with outdated facilities, a crumbling exterior and segregation, but also low test scores and attendance.In the 1998-99 school year, 63 percent of the school was black, while 36 percent was white. In the 2007-08 school year, 76 percent were black and 23 percent white.Forty percent of Evangeline Parish's student population is black. In order for a school to not be considered racially identifiable, its population should be within 15 percentage points of the parish's student population - or in Ville Platte High's case, up to 55 percent black.Free-or-reduced lunch students made up 75 percent of the population in the 1998-99 school year. Last year, 90 percent of students received free or reduced lunch.Every day, some 90 students are absent from the school.Last year, 40 percent of ninth graders who began the school year did not finish it.This year, the state declared the school "academically unacceptable" for the second year in a row. It's the lowest performing school in the parish and the lowest performing high school in Acadiana based on state performance standards.Principal Edwards acknowledges that the school has problems, but has instituted reforms, including tutoring, interventions and remedial classes.The school performance was still unacceptable last year, but it inched up to half a point away from an acceptable rating.Boom and changeThe 150-year-old city of Ville Platte is the parish seat of Evangeline Parish and best known for "Slap Ya Mama" Cajun seasoning and the smoked meat and cotton festivals.Ville Platte first appeared in the U.S. Census in 1900 when just 163 people lived in the agricultural town. By 1910, the town's population almost tripled with a population registered at 603 people.Like many towns in the early twentieth century, when the railroad arrived in Ville Platte, so did people. The town's population boomed throughout the first half of the 20th century when the population peaked at 9,692 people in 1970.Main Street, dotted with modest red-brick buildings that house the library and city hall, show what Ville Platte once was. But beyond Main Street the town is mostly inhabited by decrepit shotgun houses with peeling paint and foil-covered windows.Aside from the decaying neighborhoods, a plot of simple red-brick government houses takes up one part of the city, while historic plantation-style homes with large balconies and perfectly manicured lawns garnish the town's boundaries.A dying cityVille Platte's population took a turn in 1980 when it decreased by almost 500 people. By 2000, the population dropped to 8,145, a more than 16 percent decrease from 1970.While the black population in Ville Platte has never decreased, the white population peaked in 1970 with 6,890 and then began to decrease. In 2000, only 3,301 residents of the city of Ville Platte were white - fewer than half the number in 1970. The city is now 60 percent black and 40 percent white.Few people know Ville Platte as well as Ville Platte Gazette Publisher David Ortego. Born in Ville Platte in 1949, he graduated from Ville Platte High School in 1967. The former Evangeline Parish School Board member, teacher and administrator now lives slightly outside the city limits.He suggests the population moved out of the city, but moved to other areas of the Ward One voting area, which is bound by Bayou Joel Marcel to the west, Chicot State Park to the north and the border of Evangeline and St. Landry parishes to the east and south.Since Ward One peaked with a population of 17,470 in 1980, its population - particularly white population - has decreased. With 16,244, the ward is now 40 percent black and 60 percent white."In the last election, the vote was mainly split down racial lines," Ortego said. Predominantly-black precincts voted for the bond, while predominantly white precincts voted against it. "The only way this can pass is if 90 percent of black residents vote and they all vote yes."

VILLE PLATTE - Ville Platte High School will most likely shut down and its 400 ninth- to 12th-graders will be bused to other high schools next year after voters narrowly rejected a bond proposal to build a new high school.

The 100-year-old school is the center of a 45-year-old desegregation struggle in Evangeline Parish.The U.S. Justice Department has continously said that the 77-percent black high school is not comparable to other high schools in the parish.Evangeline Parish Ward One voters struck down a $17.75-million bond that would have funded the construction of a new Ville Platte High School.With 100 percent of precincts reporting, 3,755 voters, or 48 percent, of Ward One voters voted for the bond proposal while 4,015 voters, or 51 percent voted no.This was the third time in 13 months and seventh time in 25 years that a bond to fund the construction of a new Ville Platte High school was up for consideration. Those against the bond say it's too excessive, while those for it say it's essential for the future of Ville Platte children.The bond would have raised taxes on property worth more than $75,000 by 15.5 mills, or about $3 for every $100,000 in property.

Worldwide Food Shortage

Having crushed the planet's peasants and converted food into just another commodity for global manipulation, the Lord's of Capital have unleashed upon humanity the threat - no, certainty - of mass starvation. The criminal mega-enterprise is centered in the United States, the former "breadbasket of the planet" whose massive conversion to biofuels has caused staple crop prices to skyrocket beyond the reach of hundreds of millions of the world's poor. The death of millions translates into profits in the trillions for the Lords of Capital, killers on a mass scale whose only talents lie in "the production of overlapping calamities, each more lethal than the last."

The Lords of Capital Decree Mass Death by Starvation

"No amount of emergency aid is sufficient to make up for the wild price rises that have already occurred."

Fidel Castro called biofuels "genocide," and he was right. And there can be no question as to the identity of the perpetrators of this global genocide: the Lords of Capital that formulate the foreign and domestic policy of the United States. That policy calls for 20 million acres of corn from states like Iowa to be converted from food to fuel. As should have been expected, such a massive diversion almost immediately pushed up the price of all other basic foodstuffs - a global disaster made quick and easy by the fact that, over the past several decades, planetary food production has been taken over by agribusiness - the speculative human parasites that control how food is bought and sold, and to whom, and for what purpose. These Lords of Capital are killers on a mass scale."Hot" money has totally distorted the "marketplace" for life-sustaining goods, causing millions of the desperately poor in scores of countries to take to the streets. "In less than a year," writes the Guardian newspaper, in Britain, "the price of wheat has risen 130 per cent, soya by 87 per cent and rice by 74 per cent."These are nothing less than crimes against humanity, and cannot help but destroy the lives of millions who are already at the very edge of the precipice."The Lords of Capital have imposed a triage of death by starvation on the planet."The so-called "market" - which is actually a club of super-rich men who distort and destroy everything of value to humanity that they touch - will be the death of us all, and much quicker than through the effects of global warming, which is also greatly accelerated by the ghoulish, greedy rush to grow food for cars rather than people. In such a murderous environment -manipulated purely for the profits of the Lords of Capital - neither trees nor peasants stand a chance. The United Nations says it needs about half a billion dollars for the most critical cases of starvation, but no amount of emergency aid is sufficient to make up for the wild price rises that have already occurred - and which will put trillions in the pockets of the Lords of Capital.Agribusiness wiped out small farmers in the U.S., and impoverished and pushed off the land untold millions of peasants, worldwide. Now the Lords of Capital have imposed a triage of death by starvation on the planet. The people who live on two dollars or less per day will have to die, and then, as prices rise, the three dollar people will follow.The men who profit from such mass murder use terms like "structural adjustment" and "economic fundamentals" to attach a veneer of rationality to a chaotic system they have created on the fly for the sole purpose of mega-theft. In the end, the Lords of Capital have mastered only one art: the production of overlapping calamities, each more lethal than the last. Soon, if not already, the Haitian poor will have no cooking oil to mix with clay for their diet of dirt pies. The Lords of Capital will have turned them into dirt for another Haitian's consumption and demise.Black Agenda - Glen Ford.

Continued

Motion to RecuseSTATE OF LOUISIANA NUMBER: J-3868IN THE INTEREST OF JUVENILE COURTJESSE RAY BEARD LASALLE PARISH, LOUISIANAMOTION TO RECUSE THE HON. J. P. MAUFFRAY, JR.NOW INTO COURT, through undersigned counsel, comes JESSE RAY BEARD, a juvenile, who moves the Court as follows:1.Jesse Ray Beard (Jesse Ray) has been charged with a delinquent act as a juvenile and will therefore face adjudication in which the trial judge will be the sole determiner of fact.2.The Honorable J.P. Mauffray, Jr. presides in this matter.3.Judge Mauffray has made numerous statements, on numerous occasions, in different procedural postures (as will be further discussed at any hearing resulting from the instant Motion), to numerous individuals, which make clear he has pre-judged not only Jesse Ray's guilt, but the disposition for Jesse Ray as well.4.A judge must be recused when he is biased, prejudiced, or personally interested in a case.5.Where the judge is the finder of fact, a judge's comments expressing his belief that a defendant is guilty may be grounds for recusal.WHEREFORE, DEFENDANT PRAYS that Judge Mauffray recuse himself from this and all other matters involving Jesse Ray, or in the alternative, that a hearing be granted in front of an impartial judge to determine whether Judge Mauffray be recused from this and all other matters involving Jesse Ray.RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED:___________________________DAVID J. UTTERJuvenile Justice Project of Louisiana1600 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd.New Orleans, LA 70113Telephone: (504) 522-5437Fax: (504) 522-5430STATE OF LOUISIANA NUMBER: J-3868IN THE INTEREST OF JUVENILE COURTJESSE RAY BEARD LASALLE PARISH, LOUISIANAMEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OFMOTION TO RECUSE THE HON. J. P. MAUFFRAY, JR.May It Please The Court:JESSE RAY BEARD (Jesse Ray), by and through counsel, respectfully moves this Court, pursuant to Louisiana Code of Criminal Procedure Article 671, Article I Section 2 of the Louisiana Constitution (Due Process), Article I Section 3 of the Louisiana Constitution (Right to Individual Dignity), and the 5th and the 14th Amendments to the United States Constitution, to recuse the Hon. J. P. Mauffray, Jr., from presiding over this case.This is a juvenile matter wherein Jesse Ray is prohibited from having a jury determine his guilt or innocence. See, e.g., La. Ch. C. Art. 808 (West 2008) (All rights guaranteed to criminal defendants by the Constitution of the United States or the Constitution of Louisiana, except the right to jury trial, shall be applicable in juvenile court proceedings.) Judge Mauffray will, therefore, be the sole determiner of fact in all proceedings in this case. Generally, a judge must be recused when he is biased, prejudiced, or personally interested in a case. La.C.Cr.P. art. 671. Indeed, article 671 mandates recusal where, for any reason, a judge is unable to conduct a fair and impartial trial. As is applicable in the instant matter, where the judge is the finder of fact, a judge's comments expressing his belief that a defendant is guilty may be grounds for recusal. State v. Willis, 915 So.2d 365 (La App.3 Cir. 2005).Judge Mauffray has made numerous statements, on numerous occasions, in different procedural postures (as will be further discussed at any hearing resulting from the instant Motion), to numerous individuals, which make clear he has pre-judged not only Jesse Ray's guilt, but the disposition for Jesse Ray as well. Indeed, Judge Mauffray has expressed his belief generally that Jesse Ray and his African-American friends are guilty, not only of the misconduct alleged in this matter, but of several other acts of misconduct as well. Additionally, Judge Mauffray's actions and statements in various proceedings for other Jena 6 members demonstrate his inability to conduct fair and impartial proceedings for Jesse Ray Beard. Judge Mauffray should, therefore, recuse himself. In the alternative, should Judge Mauffray refuse to do so, a fair and impartial court should do so for him.In any delinquency proceeding– and particularly in a delinquency case with the eyes of the world watching – it is imperative that Òjustice satisfy the appearance of justice." In Re Murchison, 349 U.S. 133, 136, 75 S.Ct. 623, 625, 99 L.Ed. 942, 946 (1955) (quoting Offutt v. United States, 348 U.S. 11, 14 (1955)). Thus, our courts have found that even the appearance of impartiality, as well as impartiality itself, outweighs the inconvenience caused by the recusal of the trial judge." State v. LeBlanc, 367 So.2d 335, 341 (La. 1979), citing State v. Lemelle, 353 So.2d1312 (La. 1977). As the federal courts have held:The question is not whether the judge is impartial in fact. It is simply whether another, not knowing whether or not the judge is actually impartial, might reasonably question his impartiality on the basis of all the circumstances.Rice v. McKenzie, 581 F.2d 1114, 1116-17 (4`'' Cir. 1978). See also Hall v. Small Business Administration, 695 F.2d 175, 179 (5th Cir. 1983) (disqualification required if a reasonable person, knowing all the circumstances, would harbor doubts about his impartiality.)Although judges in small towns like Jena may know extra-judicial facts about parties who come before them, all judges are expected to act fairly and impartially. Judge Mauffray's statements, however, to participants in proceedings, and his behavior in Jesse Ray's case and other cases known as the Jena 6, show that he is so personally interested, biased, and prejudiced, that he is unable to conduct a fair and impartial trial. See La. C. Cr. P. art. 671(1).For reasons stated in this Motion, article 671 sections (1) and (6) require that Judge Mauffray be recused from presiding over Jesse Ray's case. Judge Mauffray should, therefore, recuse himself from this and all other matters involving Jesse Ray. In the alternative, a hearing should be granted in front of an impartial judge. As will be shown at such a hearing, there is no question that Judge Mauffray should be recused because he is biased, prejudiced, and personally interested in this case and cannot conduct a fair trial.Date: _____________________RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED:___________________________DAVID J. UTTERJuvenile Justice Project of Louisiana1600 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd.New Orleans, LA 70113Telephone: (504) 522-5437Fax: (504) 522-5430C E R T I F I C A T EI hereby certify that a copy of the foregoing motion has been served upon Mr. ReedWalters, Assistant District Attorney, Parish of LaSalle, on this the ___ day of ______________,2007.___________________________________DAVID J. UTTERSTATE OF LOUISIANA NUMBER: J-3868IN THE INTEREST OF JUVENILE COURTJESSE RAY BEARD LASALLE PARISH, LOUISIANAORDERConsidering the foregoing motion, it is ordered that Jesse Ray Beard be granted a hearing herein and that same be heard on the ___________ day of ____________________, at ___ o'clock AM/PM, contradictorily with the State of Louisiana.Jena, Louisiana, this ___ day of ___________________, 2008.___________________________________JUDGE J. P. MAUFFRAY, JR.

Baron & Jesse Ray

NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- The family of a Winn Parish man who died after a police officer repeatedly jolted him with a Taser filed a wrongful-death lawsuit on Monday, Aug. 11.The federal lawsuit accuses Winnfield city officials of civil rights violations in the death of Baron "Scooter" Pikes, 21.Former Winnfield police officer Scott Nugent is accused of shocking a handcuffed Pikes nine times with a 50,000-volt Taser stun gun while arresting him on a drug possession warrant in January. A coroner ruled the death was a homicide.A grand jury in Winnfield convened on the case today and will continue the hearing on Wednesday.Taser International Inc. is named as a defendant in the lawsuit filed Monday by Latrina Thomas, who is the mother of Pikes' 4-year-old son.Thomas also is suing the city of Winnfield, its mayor, City Council, police chief and several police officers, including Nugent. The lawsuit seeks unspecified punitive and compensatory damages, plus fees and expenses."It's about justice," said Carol Powell Lexing, a lawyer for Pikes' family. "You can't bring (Pikes) back, but this can hold those responsible accountable for their actions."Nugent was fired in May, but he is appealing his dismissal. Nugent's lawyer, Phillip Terrell, said his client followed department protocols and didn't use excessive force."It's a tragedy any way you look at it," Terrell said.Terrell said he hadn't seen the lawsuit, but he echoed the suit's allegation that Winnfield failed to properly supervise and train its officers."If there's any culpability here, it's on Winnfield for not properly training police officers," Terrell said.Nevils, whose office received a copy of a state police report on Pikes' death last month, said his decision to take the case to a grand jury also was based on information that his office gathered "independently." Terrell said he doesn't expect his client to testify before the grand jury.Winnfield is about 40 miles northwest of Jena, where thousands of demonstrators gathered last year to protest the criminal cases against six black teenagers who were charged with beating a white student at a high school.Like the so-called "Jena Six" case, race has figured into the aftermath of the Winnfield case. Pikes was black; Nugent is white. Powell Lexing has accused city officials of trying to cover up a racially motivated case of police brutality.Racial tensions aren't the only parallel between the two cases. Mychal Bell, one of the Jena Six, is a first cousin of Pikes, according to Powell Lexing.gsscLawsuit

A Winn Parish grand jury today considered criminal charges against a former police officer involved in a Tasering incident that resulted in a suspect’s death, but no decision was made.The grand jury is scheduled to reconvene on Wednesday, Aug. 13.A spokesman for Winn Parish District Attorney Chris Nevils said the grand jury is hearing evidence in the death of 21-year-old Baron “Scooter” Pikes.Pikes was shocked nine times with a 50,000-volt Taser as he was arrested on a drug possession warrant in January. Nevils says former Winnfield police officer Scott Nugent has acknowledged using the device on Pikes.Nugent was fired but is appealing his dismissal. Pikes' death certificate classified his death as a homicide and stated he died as a result of cardiac arrest caused by nine shocks of 50,000 volts from a conductive electrical weapon, Winn Parish Coroner Dr. Randy Williams said. Pikes may have been dead before the last two shocks were administered, Williams said.Nevils has said his decision to send the case to the grand jury came after receiving the results of a Louisiana State Police investigation of the January incident, the coroner's investigation and an investigation done by his office.Winnfield Police in January said Pikes began acting strangely after being brought to the jail by police, prompting them to ask him if he had taken any drugs. Pikes is alleged to have told them he had ingested PCP and crack cocaine and was asthmatic.Williams said Pikes had no PCP or crack cocaine in his system and that there is no record of him having had asthma.What there was evidence of was that five minutes after police had Pikes in custody -- on his stomach and handcuffed after he had run from officers for about three minutes -- he was shot by Nugent with the Taser six times. Those six shots came within 190 seconds of one another, with the last five being "drive stuns," in which the Taser is stuck directly into the skin, and the first being from a cartridge.Minutes later, Pikes was carried to the patrol car, Williams said, where the probes of the Taser's cartridge were removed by the officer. Once at the police station, Pikes was ordered to get out of the patrol car but didn't.Williams said he isn't sure if Pikes was able to get out, but Nugent shot him with the stun gun again while Pikes was sitting in the back seat, the coroner said.Officers pulled Pikes out of the car, pushed him to the ground, and Nugent shot him with the stun gun two more times, Williams said. At this point, there was no reaction from Pikes, and he remained unconscious, Williams said. In total, Williams said, the nine shocks were all given within a 14-minute time span.Although Winnfield Police initially told the media that Pikes became "sick" while being booked at the jail, Williams said Pikes clearly was unconscious before he was carried into the Police Department.The clear cause of death, he said, was electrocution."Every other reasonable possibility has been excluded," Williams said.Nugent's attorney Phillip Terrell said Nugent is "anxious" to tell his side of the story and that in due time -- when "all the facts are made public" -- a different "appreciation" of what happened will be known. He stressed that both he and Nugent see what happened to Pikes as a terrible tragedy.Carol Powell-Lexing, who is representing Pikes' family, said the family wants justice by way of the perpetrator -- Nugent -- being held responsible for his actions."Mr. Pikes was executed by electrocution," she said. "And after his death (police) tried to cover it up, shove all this under the rug. ... (Pikes) didn't struggle with officers. He did nothing to cause him to be put to death."

A Winn Parish grand jury convened Tuesday to hear evidence in the death of a Winnfield man who was shot nine times with a Taser stun gun by a police officer.Bill Furlow, spokesman for Winn Parish District Attorney Chris Nevils, said Tuesday evening that the grand jury heard evidence and will meet again today to continue working.The grand jury will decide whether there is enough evidence to criminally charge the police officer involved.The Jan. 17 death of Baron "Scooter" Pikes was ruled a homicide by the Winn Parish coroner.Pikes died after he was shot with a Taser by former Winnfield Police Officer Scott Nugent. Pikes was shot nine times within 14 minutes, according to police reports.Nugent was suspended and then fired from the police force. He is appealing the termination.Winn Parish Coroner Dr. Randy Williams has said Pikes was handcuffed while being shot with the Taser and did not have PCP or cocaine in his system as officers alleged.Williams said Pikes might have already died before the last two zaps with the Taser. Pikes died of cardiac arrest.The family of Pikes filed a wrongful-death lawsuit Monday against not only Nugent but the city of Winnfield, the mayor, City Council, police chief and other officers on the force, in addition to Taser International Inc.The lawsuit alleges civil rights violations. It was filed by Latrina Thomas, the mother of Pikes' 4-year-old son.

Jesse Ray Beard is not returning to Jena High School this school year.The youngest of the “Jena Six” defendants will attend school in Connecticut, according to his attorney, David Utter.“This is a heck of an opportunity for Jesse Ray,” Utter said today. “Jesse Ray knows this is a great opportunity for him.”Beard, now 17, was one of five Jena High School students arrested and charged in connection with the December 2006 attack on a fellow student at the school. Beard is awaiting trial for that incident but had been on house arrest for 16 months for previous juvenile adjudications and alleged probation violation. During the summer, he was only allowed to leave his home to attend church, Utter said during a July hearing on the probation matter.Ninth Judicial District Judge Thomas Yeager, who is now hearing the Jena Six cases, released Beard for the summer to go to New York where Beard took a correspondence course, worked in a law firm and lived with an attorney. According to the motion requesting probation termination filed by Utter, Beard took an English course, was at work every day, had a physical fitness training regimen and joined a church in New York.Beard was to return to Jena on Monday in preparation for the start of Jena High classes on Thursday, but Yeager terminated his probation, allowing him to move and attend school out of state.Utter said his client will be attending a boarding school where 100 percent of the football team is accepted to college following high school graduation.Beard has been accepted to the Canterbury School, a private high school, where “Coach (Tom) Taylor, as indicated in his letter to the Court, is committed to help Jesse Ray Beard succeed academically and athletically at the Canterbury School and realize his dream of going to college,” the motion states.Utter says in the motion that Beard would be highly supervised as there is a faculty adviser who is assigned to students who live in the dorm and who oversees required two and a half hours each night of study time. Classes are held on Saturday, and all boarding students are required to attend a religious service on Sunday, the motion states.“... Jesse Ray Beard was given the chance to prove himself. He has done so in every respect, and now he asks the Court for the opportunity to reach his full potential at the Canterbury School in Milford, Connecticut,” the motion states.Yeager signed the motion last Wednesday, Aug. 6, granting the termination of probation.The teen does remain under conditions of his bail release in connection with the December 2006 incident.LaSalle Parish District Attorney Reed Walters issued no response today on the motion when The Town Talk contacted his spokesman for a comment. Jesse Ray

Ignoring recent allegations of wrong-doing in the Houma Police Department, Terrebonne Parish's National Association for the Advancement of Colored People gave the city's top cop its highest honor.

Terrebonne Parish NAACP President Jerome Boykin presented Houma Police Chief Pat Boudreaux the organization's President's Award. Boudreaux, who remains out on paid leave, was on hand for the presentation at the 26th annual NAACP Freedom Fund Banquet Saturday at the Houma-Terrebonne Civic Center.

"The NAACP is not concerned about what complaints have been made against Chief Boudreaux. His record is unblemished," Boykin said.

"Furthermore, this NAACP will do all that we can to see that Chief Patrick Boudreaux remains the chief of the Houma Police Department," he said.

A clearly emotional Boudreaux told the crowd, "This is the best award I have ever received. It's the best because I got it for who I am, what I stand for and what I believe. It wasn't for something I did, and that's what makes it so special."

Boudreaux said when Boykin told him he was this year's recipient, "I told him, 'What about the letters? You need to read what the letters say.' In turn, Jerome responded, 'I don't need to read anything. I know who you are. I know what you stand for.'"

The crowd gave Boudreaux a standing ovation.

The "letters" the police chief spoke of surfaced shortly before the start of summer. Addressed to the Houma-Terrebonne Civil Service Board, the missives, penned by members of Boudreaux's department, accuse him of sexual harassment and one instance of alleged improper use of police equipment.

As the letters came before the board, Boudreaux went on a medical leave of absence to receive treatment for a spinal cord injury, which required physical therapy and, previously, chemotherapy and radiation.

As the date of his return to the job arrived in July, Terrebonne Parish President Michel Claudet placed Boudreaux on a 60-day paid administrative leave until the accusations could be investigated.

Boykin told the crowd on Saturday that the accusations didn't arise until the chief's illness resurfaced.

"You know, all last year and the year before in Jefferson Parish, there was a sheriff sick with leukemia," Boykin said, alluding to the late Sheriff Harry Lee. "Not once while he was seeking treatment were there allegations thrown against him. Not once while he was sick did someone start a movement to recall Harry Lee."

"Whoever is doing this against this man, whom I believe is one of the best chiefs we've ever had, better watch out. It's a vicious attack," Boykin warned. "Several officers saw their boss' sickness as a weakness. They'd better watch out."

Also at Saturday's banquet, Boykin was presented $35,000 for the local NAACP branch's scholarship program - $15,000 from Olive Garden and $20,000 from Outback, both in Houma. Since Boykin took the helm as president of the organization in 1995, the Terrebonne NAACP has awarded more than $250,000 to college-bound graduating seniors.

Hollywood actor Louis Gossett Jr. served as guest speaker and native son and actor Cordell Moore was master of ceremonies.

In his keynote address, Gossett saluted the 2008 graduating class. "Nothing is impossible," he told graduates.

At one point, looking out at the mixed races in the crowd, Gossett said, "Look at yourselves. How beautiful this is."

Gossett added, "Somewhere along on the line, this country has placed oil as its most valuable commodity. I disagree. I believe it is our children. What we plant in them is how the future will grow."

Later in the evening, Lafourche Parish President Craig Webre deputized Gossett. The "Roots" star was given an honorary commission.

Also, Claudet presented him with keys to Houma and Terrebonne Parish.gssc

National civil-rights group lauds localsBy Robert ZulloStaff WriterPublished: Friday, August 1, 2008 at 3:00 p.m. Last Modified: Friday, August 1, 2008 at 2:00 p.m.

KENNER -- A national organization that traces its history back to one of the most important moments in the civil-rights movement recognized three local community leaders for their commitment to making Terrebonne a better place for all the people who live here.The Southern Christian Leadership Conference, founded by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., after the Montgomery, Ala., bus boycott of 1955-56, presented Terrebonne NAACP President Jerome Boykin, local attorney Kevin Thompson and the Rev. Thomas Williams, pastor of Morning Star Baptist Church in Thibodaux, with a Community Service Award Tuesday night during the national organization’s annual convention, held this year in Kenner.The Rev. Vincent Fusilier Sr., pastor of St. Mathews Baptist Church and president of the Terrebonne chapter of the SCLC recommended the three for the award."He’s a fighter," Fusilier said of Boykin, who he also credited with registering hundreds of voters during a drive about eight years ago. "He stands for the people that have been mistreated or misused. … He’s the man. He gets the job done."Boykin, who has been the local NAACP president for 13 years, said the recognition is appreciated, especially from a group that counts the son of the civil-rights movement’s most celebrated leader among its board of directors. King’s son, Martin Luther King III, was present at the convention to clasp the award-winners’ hands for a photo."It was an honor to receive an award from a national organization, especially an organization that was founded by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.," Boykin said.Thompson, one of the first black attorneys in the parish to own his own practice, was nominated largely for his efforts to raise money for recreational-sports program, so the young athletes could afford to play in other parts of the state, Fusilier said"We purchase uniforms for the team, promote their events, help sponsor some of the trips," said Thompson, who also teaches adult Sunday school at Residence Baptist Church in Mechanicville.Like Boykin and Williams, Thompson described receiving the award and getting to meet King’s son as a "humbling experience."Williams, the pastor at Morning Star for 18 years, was honored for leading the charge in 1988-89 to get the Terrebonne School Board to recognize Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a holiday."That day was an exciting day for us in Houma," Williams said.The award ceremony was an emotional moment, the preacher added."I was thinking of what Dr. King stood for and what I tried to implement when I tried to get this day considered in Terrebonne Parish," Williams said. "It brought tears to my eyes."The weeklong convention -- the SCLC’s 50th -- was a gala affair that featured actress Marla Gibbs, the Rev. Al Sharpton, actor Clyde R. Jones, and a phoned-in speech from the Rev. Jesse Jackson.Staff Writer Robert Zullo can be reached at 985-850-1150.gssc

SCLC President says Dr. King Left a Business Plan for SuccessBy George E Curry, Contributing WriterAugust 4, 2008

NEW ORLEANS (Special to the NNPA from the Afro-American Newspapers) - Charles Steele Jr., president of Dr. Martin Luther King's old organization, said the slain civil rights leader left behind a "business plan" for Black economic success.Opening the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) 50th convention here, Steele said: "If you listen closely to his last speech at Mason Temple [in Memphis], Dr. King was giving us a business plan. Dr. King was taking care of business. If you have taken the most elementary business course-and even if you haven't-you know that the first thing you need when you go into business is a business plan."The SCLC president mentioned the early struggles of the founder of Radio One and TV One media companies."Cathy Hughes talks about starting out in business and being asked, 'What is your business plan?' Her reply: 'I plan to stay in business.' SCLC plans the stay in business."Our business plan is straight out of Dr. King's "I Have a Dream" speech. No, it's not about a dream, it's about economics. The part of the speech that you don't hear repeated every year around his birthday is the section related to economics. He declared, 'America has given the Negro people a bad check; a check which has come back marked 'insufficient funds.'"Steele said, "We're back here, where SCLC was founded, to say that we came back to get the check. Dr. King said 45 years ago, that America did not have enough funds in its bank account. They gave us a bad check. And today, we're back for a good one. If you can't give us a check, we'll take cash. But with your record, we need cash - and two forms of ID. We probably should ask for a DNA test as well."Speaking at the Pilgrim Baptist Church in suburban Kenner, La., Steele said: "Nearly five years after announcing we got stuck with a bad check, Dr. King went to Memphis to outline a business plan, not just a plan to stay in business."Dr. King explained: 'We don't have to argue with anybody. We don't have to curse and go around acting bad with our words. We don't need any bricks and bottles, we don't need any Molotov cocktails. We just need to go around to these stores, and to these massive industries in our country, and say, 'God sent us by here, to say to you that you're not treating his children right. And we've come by here to ask you to make the first item on your agenda-fair treatment, where God's children are concerned. Now, if you are not prepared to do that, we do have an agenda that we must follow. And our agenda calls for withdrawing economic support from you.'Steele urged, "Note the emphasis on 'withdrawing economic support.' Now, for those who still did not get it, he was blunt: '...We've got to strengthen our Black institutions,' he said. 'I call upon you to take your money out of the [White] banks downtown and deposit your money in Tri-State Bank. We want a bank-in movement in Memphis... We have six or seven Black insurance companies in Memphis. Take out your insurance there. We want to have an 'insurance-in.'"Dr. King was clear: 'We begin the process of building a greater economic base. And at the same time, we are putting pressure where it really hurts.' If you still didn't get it, Dr. King explained it this way: 'Always anchor our external direct action with the power of economic withdrawal.'"Steele said it is even more important that Blacks learn to support other Blacks."By 2011, annual Black spending power will reach $1.1 trillion, representing almost nine cents of every dollar spent in the United States, according to a University of Georgia study. Still, nothing leaves the Black community faster than a dollar."Steele noted that Dr. King, winner of the Nobel Peace prize, was an international figure when he was assassinated 40 years ago. Continuing in King's footsteps, Steele said SCLC will continue establishing conflict resolution centers around the world in hopes of bringing about peace."These are exciting times. I wish Dr. King was alive to see the response to Barack Obama in Europe," Steele said. "People want change and that was evident in Europe as 200,000 people shouted, 'Yes, we can' in Germany."And when Obama got to Paris and London, he was being treated like a rock star. The closest McCain got to Germany was eating in a small German restaurant."Steele said it would be a mistake to think Obama's popularity is limited to the fact that he is an African-American."The world is embracing more than just Barack Obama; it's embracing a new kind of openness. Thousands applaud because Obama says he wants the U.S. to be a partner and not just try to dictate to other countries. It is a relationship of equals that they embrace."Contact Us - - Copyright 2005, Louisiana Weekly Publishing Company

Denham Springs-10 June 2008

DENHAM SRPINGS — Livingston Parish sheriff’s deputies investigated a complaint Thursday of racial slurs spray-painted on a truck, a vacant trailer and land in the vicinity of a black couple’s residence, deputies said.The slurs included “KKK” and the “N-word,” said Deputy Perry Rushing, spokesman for the parish Sheriff’s Office.The inquiry yielded no arrests, he said. A deputy could find no evidence to link to the crime to one woman who was questioned Thursday, Rushing said.He said the deputy could find no evidence of spray cans or the residue from them at the woman’s trailer or on her person. The woman consented to the search.Rushing also said the deputy had been called to the trailer park Wednesday for a disturbance and the woman was wearing the same clothes then as she was Thursday.He said deputies were called to 21461 Bonnie Drive, Denham Springs, at the Highland Ridge Trailer Park about 6:16 a.m. A deputy arrived there shortly before 7 a.m. The trailer park is off La. 16 north of Port Vincent.Rushing said the incident has been treated as a criminal damage case, but said the possibility exists it could be a hate crime depending on further evidence.State statutes would require deputies to establish the intent of any person or persons accused of spray-painting the slurs, he said.

Continued

Racist symbols appear in Metairie yardBlack family stunned by 'this garbage'Tuesday, June 10, 2008By Michelle HunterMore than four weeks after someone burned the letters KKK and the shapes of three crosses in the front yard of an African-American family's Metairie home, the grass still refuses to grow. And the family has not rushed to remove the symbols."We left it out there because we want people in the neighborhood to know that there are people in their own backyards that believe in this garbage," said the family's patriarch, who asked not to be named when a reporter stopped by Monday. He said he doesn't want any publicity for himself, just public awareness that "racism is still alive and it is well."The Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office and the FBI are investigating the damage as a possible hate crime. The symbols appear to have been made by a chemical, not by fire. They were reported May 7. No suspects have been arrested.');}-->The property, in a predominantly white section of northeast Metairie, is home to a 35-year-old chef and a 34-year-old cosmetologist and their three children. They had lived in the house only five days when the symbols were discovered."I just didn't know what to think," the man said, holding his 19-month-old son in one arm and his 5-month-old daughter in the other. "I didn't know what to say. I was just in awe."The father said he was afraid at first, then outraged. Now he's confused and frustrated."I want to ask, 'Why?' We haven't been in the neighborhood long enough to cause a ruckus. We didn't do anything. It's 2008 and you still can't get past the racial issue?"Perhaps the hardest part for the couple was explaining to their 9-year-old son why there were so many police cars in the yard last month, the meaning of burned crosses and the Ku Klux Klan, and why someone might not like the boy because of his skin color. It was a painful conversation the father said he never imagined having to have in this day and age.But the family is determined to stay put, said the father, recalling that they have moved three times since Hurricane Katrina. "After my wife made me pack up all that stuff and move, I'm not going anywhere," he said with a laugh.He called the vandalism a cowardly act born of ignorance, and a similar reaction on his part would amount to stooping to the culprit's level. As a father, he said, he must be a better model for his son.I still have to be a responsible adult in this house," he said. "We're trying to teach them that they should not live in fear, to speak when spoken to, keep your hands to yourself and respect others."The family has been helped by neighbors who, one by one, came to their door and offered support as word of the incident spread. One of those neighbors was Dave Tibbetts, 52."It's just unbelievable that this would happen," Tibbetts said.

The family is confident that the guilty party will be caught. The father said he's not looking for a stiff jail sentence or fines, but for the perpetrator to be sentenced to community service in an African-American neighborhood."I want him . . . to come out of his comfort zone," the father said, "to see that black people are not animals. They are everyday people.". . . . . . .Anyone with information about the incident can call the FBI at (504) 816-3000 or the Sheriff's Office investigations bureau at (504) 364-5300.Michelle Hunter can be reached at mhunter@timespicayune.com or (504) 883-7054.

Shelling

Dupree voted back as Monroe City Schools superintendentNo terms, no timeline set in new contractBy Barbara Leader • bleader@thenewsstar.com • August 13, 2008

One vote changed, and the superintendent of a school district with schools in trouble and a declining student population kept his job.

James Dupree's position in charge of Monroe City Schools will not end Sept. 20, as was previously determined in two school board votes.On Tuesday, board member Brenda Shelling reversed her vote, saying she had been pressured to reverse her decision since votes in March and April to not renew Dupree's contract."It's not easy when people tug you left and tug you right," she said. "But sometimes it's just a little nudge that pushes you over the edge."There has been an all-out effort to hunt and destroy my family."Shelling's swing vote left Dupree in place by a 4-3 vote.Shelling, Stephanie Smith, Rodney McFarland and Jesse Handy voted to support his hiring. Vickie Dayton, Vickie Krutzer and Mickey Traweek held their positions not to rehire Dupree.Shelling made the motion to hire Dupree."I would like to reject the applicants and move that we rehire Dr. Jim Dupree as superintendent for Monroe City Schools," she said before making her motion.The board appointed a search committee in April to advertise and interview applicants to replace Dupree.In a meeting Monday night, search committee members presented the board with the committee's top five choices for Dupree's replacement.Following the announcement, liaison Nerissa Bryant told the board one of the applicants had withdrawn.Early in Tuesday's meeting, search committee chairman Lorraine Slacks told board members another of the top five had withdrawn his name.Bryant told the board Monday that Tom Graves withdrew from contention because he did not believe students were the district's top priority."It appears that there is a fourth vote to extend the contract," Traweek said before the vote. "I am unsure how he (Dupree) could feel comfortable and confident that it took three rounds to reach this vote."Traweek later expressed his intention to support Dupree if the board chose to rehire him.Shelling has long been considered to be the potential swing vote in the effort to rehire Dupree. She voted twice to hire a new superintendent."I'd say what my husband always says: 'It's not easy being a Shelling,' " Shelling said.Dupree is officially rehired, but terms of his contract must be negotiated. Shelling's motion called for Dupree and board attorney Doug Lawrence to work out the details.Her motion specified no time and no salary range. Traweek questioned that the terms of the contract were not in the motion and requested Dupree be hired for the salary the board advertised for applicants. She did not accept Traweek's amendment, restated her motion and called for the vote.The vote was taken. Lawrence requested Dayton and Shelling participate in the negotiation.The contract will be brought back before the board at its next meeting.In other business, the board went into executive session for 30 minutes to discuss a possible ethics violation involving a candidate for principal of Carroll High School.Shelling's daughter, Cassandra Shelling, was one of the top three candidates for the position.Shelling proposed the executive session, saying the board was violating state law by considering her daughter for the job."My concern is that we have violated state law by allowing my daughter to apply for a position that she should not have been allowed to apply for," Brenda Shelling said.The agenda stated that the board would hear and act on the superintendent's recommendation, but after the executive session, Dupree said he was not prepared to make a recommendation."I regret that she is unable to progress in her profession here in the Monroe City Schools," Brenda Shelling said. "I am proud, very proud, that my daughter tried to come back into this system with pride and honor."Thank you to those who supported her and to those that didn't, I pity you."Cassandra Shelling was dismissed from her position as a teacher when she was accused of conduct unbecoming a professional.

This Is The Time

Their is not going to be another time. This is the Time. This is the moment in history of Our time, that an opportunity for real Change can occur. Now! And Forever! For Everyone! This is it. There will not be another.